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  1. Digital simulations are especially helpful in physics education, but most simulations provide only a visual- ization of a phenomenon while obscuring the mathematical relationships that model its behavior. Our team is developing a suite of online simulations called DynamicsLab, which combine visual representations with an ability to input and alter the governing physics equations. Here, we share excerpts from a group of clinical interviews, in which intermediate physics students explored the first iterations of a DynamicsLab simulation of a characteristic problem in Classical Mechanics: the bead on a spinning hoop. The students were given predict- observe-explain prompts to investigate the way they connected the mathematical representation to the physical phenomenon. We highlight three episodes in which students had to revise unsuccessful predictions, and how these instances indicate that engaging with the DynamicsLab simulation encouraged the students to draw upon a more diverse range of knowledge elements to support their physical and mathematical reasoning. 
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